*475 ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
On petition for rehearing, Humberto Gallo now claims that the court’s affirmance of his conviction,
see U.S. v. Martinez,
I. Waiver on Appeal
We do not consider issues or arguments raised for the first time on petition for rehearing.
U.S. v. Richards,
A. Failure to Raise the Issue on Appeal
Nowhere in his briefs did Gallo frame the issue on appeal as the sufficiency of the evidence before the district court at the close of the government’s case. Instead, Gallo said the issue was “[wjhether the evidence was sufficient to prove that Gallo conspired to possess cocaine with intent to distribute.” (Gallo’s Opening Brief, p. 2.) By contrast, his codefendant Gomez, who also moved for acquittal at the close of the government’s case and rested immediately thereafter, stated his issue on appeal in a different way:
Whether the trial court erred in failing to grant Appellant’s motion for judgment of acquittal as to Counts I, II and III of the superseding indictment at the close of the government’s case, based upon insufficiency of the evidence as a matter of law to prove knowledge on his part that drugs were involved?
(Gomez’s Brief, p. 1.) (Emphasis added.)
These questions are not the same. Precedents have already pointed out the difference. The Fifth Circuit has explained the distinction as follows:
Brechtel purports to challenge the district court’s denial of his motions for judgment of acquittal under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(a) as well as raise a sufficiency claim. By presenting defense evidence, Brechtel waived any objection to the district court’s denial of his Rule 29(a) motion at the close of the government’s case-in-chief. E.g., United States v. Elam,678 F.2d 1234 (5th Cir.1982). Thus, Brechtel’s challenge to the denial of his latter Rule 29(a) motion simply restates the sufficiency claim.
U.S. v. Brechtel,
B. Failure to Argue on Appeal
Even if we assume that Gallo had properly framed the issue on appeal, never did he argue that it was or would be error to consider Martinez’s testimony. Gallo simply argued that nothing in the actions or statements made by Gallo or the other participants indicated that Gomez or Martinez had knowledge of the cocaine aspect of the crime and, therefore, contended that the evidence was insufficient to convict him. (Gallo’s Opening Brief, p. 11.)
Considering that neither Gallo nor Gomez testified, the only “statements” “made by Gallo or the other participants” were Gallo’s statements to the government agent and confidential informant and Martinez’s testimony. Before the petition for rehearing, Gallo had never argued that the appellate court was limited in the evidence it could consider in determining the sufficiency of the evidence. 2 In its appellate brief, the government did not differentiate among the three defendant-appellants, but argued that “the record is replete with evidence to sustain appellants’ convictions” based on the entirety of the evidence admitted at trial, including Martinez’s testimony. (United States’s Brief, pp. 18, 21-22.) But nowhere in Gallo’s Reply Brief did Gallo try to distinguish the evidence that could be used against him from the evidence that might properly be used only against one or both of his eodefendants. (Gallo’s Reply Brief, p. 2.)
II. Waiver at Trial
Even if we assume that Gallo— during the course of his appeal — had properly preserved both the issue he now tries to advance and his present argument regarding it, he — at trial — waived the underlying legal proposition by making affirmative use of Martinez’s testimony. By introducing evidence or by using evidence introduced by a codefendant, a defendant waives his right to have the sufficiency of the evidence determined as the evidence was at the close of the government’s case.
Thomas,
In Cardenas Alvarado, the Fifth Circuit held that it would evaluate a codefendant’s testimony in determining the sufficiency of the evidence because the defendant “utilized his codefendant’s testimony concerning duress in his closing argument, and requested that the jury be instructed on duress.” Id. (Emphasis added.) In a similar way, Gallo’s counsel, in his summation to the jury, argued as follows:
One other witness testified about elements of knowledge and conspiracy. That is Martinez. Mr. Waters [the prosecutor] would have you disbelieve his testimony.
If you will get up on the stand and lie, then you get up on the stand and you exonerate yourself completely. That is not what Mr. Martinez did. He got up, and he admitted to you he was involved in a rip-off of a burglary; right? He admitted to a crime. What he said as I am telling you in Mr. Gallo’s case, it was not possession of cocaine. It was not conspiracy to possess cocaine. It was money. “We went there to get money.”
(3 SR, Vol. I, p. 13.) 3
Lawyers know that argument to the jury must be based solely on the evidence admitted at trial.
See e.g., U.S. v. Herber
*477
man,
III. Conspiracy with an Unnamed Co-Conspirator
Even if we assume that Gallo did not waive his right to a mid-trial determination of the sufficiency of the evidence against him, Gallo’s present argument is meritless. Gallo seems to assume that his conviction must be based on a conspiracy with Martinez. That is not so.
In the context of our previous opinion, we pointed out the obvious: because Martinez’s conviction was upheld, Gallo’s argument that he lacked co-conspirators was without merit.
U.S. v. Martinez,
We have repeatedly held that a defendant may be convicted of conspiring with “persons unknown,” if sufficient evidence supports the existence and involvement of such unknown persons.
See U.S. v. Mosquera,
In
Carcaise,
we upheld defendant’s conviction for conspiracy to possess drugs with intent to distribute despite the absence of convicted codefendants and despite the fact that the “unknown person” with whom the defendant conspired was never identified. The only evidence of the existence of such an unknown person was defendant’s statements referring to “the guy,” “my friend” and “these people.”
Carcaise,
In the present case, the government presented evidence to establish the following facts and to convict Gallo, apart from whatever evidence Martinez introduced after the government rested. Gallo contacted a government agent and stated that he was interested in a “drug rip.” (R., Vol. 3, p. 27.) At a later meeting, Gallo “said that he had the guns and the people ready [to steal the 50 kilograms of cocaine]. He was a professional. He had done this before.” (R., Vol, 3, p. 30) (emphasis added). Finally, Gallo was to receive 25 kilograms of cocaine as his share of the “drug rip.” (R., Vol. 3, p. 31.) Gallo’s statement that “he had the guns and the people ready” was legally sufficient for the jury to conclude that Gallo had entered into a conspiracy with somebody to steal cocaine. For the government’s evidence to be sufficient to convict Gallo, it was not necessary for the evidence to be sufficient to allow the jury to identify with particularity the other conspirator or conspirators. It is enough that the evidence was sufficient to show that Gallo conspired with someone.
The government presented sufficient evidence in its case-in-chief for a jury to *478 convict Gallo of entering into a conspiracy with someone to possess and distribute cocaine. That this same evidence was, by itself, insufficient to convict Gomez or Martinez is without consequence to the analysis of the sufficiency of the evidence for Gallo. 5 That the government relied on different evidence (Martinez’s testimony) to establish Martinez’s guilt and that this evidence would not have been considered in evaluating Gallo’s mid-trial Rule 29(a) motion is also beside the point. 6
On the bases discussed above, each of which would be sufficient by itself, we conclude Gallo has demonstrated no reversible error on Thomas grounds; and we — having also looked at all the other arguments advanced in the petition 7 — deny his petition for rehearing.
PETITION DENIED.
Notes
. Rule 29(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides in pertinent part:
The court on motion of defendant or of its own motion shall order the entry of judgment of acquittal of one or more offenses charged in the indictment or information after the evidence on either side is closed if the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction of such offense or offenses.
. Gallo never even cited Thomas. Gallo's opening brief does "adopt” portions of both Gomez's and Martinez’s briefs and both cite Thomas. Neither, however, relies on it for the proposition that a codefendant's testimony cannot be considered when reviewing sufficiency of the evidence in a casé such as this one.
. As. did the defendant in Cardenas Alvarado, Gallo requested a jury instruction that sought to take advantage of a codefendant's testimony. That Gallo would have requested this theory of defense instruction even absent Martinez’s testimony is likely, however. We, in finding waiver in this case, do not rely on Gallo's requested instruction and do not believe the requested instruction was the crucial factor in finding waiver in Cardenas Alvarado either.
. Count I of the indictment charges that Gallo, Gomez and Martinez "did knowingly and intentionally combine, conspire, confederate and agree with each other and persons known and unknown ...”
. That some alleged conspirators in the same conspiracy are not convicted — in and of itself— means nothing. For example, even if both Gomez and Martinez had been acquitted by the jury, Gallo's conviction could stand given the government's evidence against him.
U.S. v. Andrews,
. We have assumed throughout this opinion that U.S. v. Thomas, supra, would apply to an analysis of Gallo’s conspiracy conviction predicated on a conspiracy involving only Gallo, Gomez and Martinez. We note that Thomas may be distinguishable, but pass over that question.
. In the course of studying Gallo’s motion for rehearing and our 20 May 1996 opinion, we did see in the opinion a sentence about defendant Gomez that is not strictly accurate: "We have found no evidence proving Gomez knew he was going to the house to steal cocaine.”
